First Menlow Board Released 45
nerdyH writes "German board vendor Lippert has unveiled what it claims to be the first motherboard based on Intel's 'Menlow' chipset for ultra-mobile PCs. The CoreExpress-Menlow is smaller than a credit card, yet clocks to 1.5GHz, has 1GB of RAM soldered onboard, has multiple PCI Express lanes, USB 2.0, HD audio, an IDE interface, and a digital LVDS video interface. The board is the first in a proposed 'CoreExpress' standard motherboard form-factor measuring 2.6 by 2.3 inches (65 x 58 mm)."
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Can you expand on what you think the added value is? In this form factor? Seriously. For a processor that is intended to power servers (ssl or vpn or the like) then sure, there is value. And Sun has added it to the Niagra line of processors. But for some little doodad that is itty bitty. What exactly are you planning on doing on this thing that it's basic math primitives won't be mor
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The other aspect is, of course, performance. Ultra-mobile chips are underpowered by the standards of desktops or even laptops. While you can do full-disk encryption
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As people say - imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.
You missed one more factor. One of the biggest battery eaters for me in a laptop is the VPN. On via it costs me nothing. On an Intel my battery life is often 20% less as a result (AESing at 256 access to a 4.5G+ IMAP store is expensive).
I for one... (Score:1)
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And it's probably going to be damn expensive (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:And it's probably going to be damn expensive (Score:4, Informative)
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Applications barrier to entry (Score:3, Insightful)
The Ars Technica analysis implied that it would be slower, clock-for-clock, and use more power than most ARM variants.
I think the point of this board that is that proprietary applications for Windows Mobile, which are compiled for ARM, tend to have less functionality than the corresponding proprietary apps for Windows XP, which are compiled for i686. People want full-size versions of familiar apps on a pocket-size device, and only a processor with the i686 instruction set can deliver this.
Re:Applications barrier to entry (Score:4, Insightful)
Riiiiiiiiiight.
It was very smart of Intel's engineers to design and implement the CABPWAPF (Clear 'Artificial Barrier to Proprietary Windows App Performance' Flag) instruction that's in the i686 instruction set.
Emulation costs power (Score:1)
I think the point of this board that is that proprietary applications for Windows Mobile, which are compiled for ARM, tend to have less functionality than the corresponding proprietary apps for Windows XP, which are compiled for i686. People want full-size versions of familiar apps on a pocket-size device, and only a processor with the i686 instruction set can deliver this.
Riiiiiiiiiight.
It was very smart of Intel's engineers to design and implement the CABPWAPF (Clear 'Artificial Barrier to Proprietary Windows App Performance' Flag) instruction that's in the i686 instruction set.
This artificial barrier is the i686 instruction set itself. ARM CPUs cannot run applications that have been compiled with x86 instructions without an x86 emulator, and I don't see how an emulator would outperform this native x86 board and use less power.
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I hear of a new technology that Von Neumann and Turing are playing around with, called the 'universal computing machine'. Maybe it'll offer the ability to algorithmize and implement computing tasks independent of the engine performing those tasks. I hear that a group of compiler engineers hope to use this 'universal computing machine' to create something called a 'cro
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It uses Silverthorne CPU. Wikipedia says Silverthorne's performance @2 GHz is equivalent to a first-generation Pentium M
Don't trust Wikipedia for this kind of thing unless it includes citations. The Pentium-M was out-of-order, the Silverthorne is in-order (unlike any other Intel chip since the 486). Take a look at Ars' coverage [arstechnica.com] for more information. At 2W, it's competing in the same performance bracket as the ARM Cortex A9 at 250mW. Don't treat an XScale as representative of ARM chips - Intel's versions always had an appalling IPC compared to other ARM variants (400MHz chips from other manufacturers regularly outperform
God does my RAZR ever look old and dowdy (Score:1)
Power (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Power (Score:5, Informative)
I have no financial relationship with Gumstix. I have several of their systems. Cheap, effective, and supported by an exceptionally active, friendly and supportive mailing list.
Your post doesn't describe required specs or desired features, so it's not easy to know what you're looking for.
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or; buy my Axim x50v
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-Rick
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Arm is generally under 1W.
Menlow isn't a chipset... (Score:1)